Hi!
I'm in a bit of a pickle, It's encouraged to apply a technique to every quote you use, but usually, the most important/useful quotes from a text don't have a conventional technique to them, and I don't want to reach saying that it's a metaphor, simile or that it uses imagery when it clearly doesn't. After scouring lists of literary devices, I still can't put my finger on what techniques the quote uses, for instance the quote, "the only evidence to the contrary was the mute protest in your own bones, the instinctive feeling that the conditions you lived in were intolerable and that at some other time they must've been different" is such a great quote form 1984, but what technique does it use? The only thing that comes to mind is a stream-of-conscience tone, which is essentially how the entire principal story line is written. How do we combat this? Is anyone else struggling with this?
Please let me know your thoughts!
I'm in a bit of a pickle, It's encouraged to apply a technique to every quote you use, but usually, the most important/useful quotes from a text don't have a conventional technique to them, and I don't want to reach saying that it's a metaphor, simile or that it uses imagery when it clearly doesn't. After scouring lists of literary devices, I still can't put my finger on what techniques the quote uses, for instance the quote, "the only evidence to the contrary was the mute protest in your own bones, the instinctive feeling that the conditions you lived in were intolerable and that at some other time they must've been different" is such a great quote form 1984, but what technique does it use? The only thing that comes to mind is a stream-of-conscience tone, which is essentially how the entire principal story line is written. How do we combat this? Is anyone else struggling with this?
Please let me know your thoughts!
Last edited: